Friday, July 17, 2026

Pastel in progress

I took some photos of around the property to do in art class, and picked up the pastels again. This is the photo - great rocks (unswept...)!

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This is the work in progress. Still a long way to go obviously, but it's starting to take shape. I'm working over an acrylic background on canvas paper and it gives it an interesting texture and also makes the pastel quite smooshable. It's a messy business.

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Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Visitor, concrete, painting

It's all go round here at the moment - the best bit has been my sister visiting for a couple of days. She was on holiday in Sydney with her family but ditched them for a couple of nights to come and see our part of the world. Which was just lovely, although the weather was AWFUL. Freezing and super windy; so I'm not sure if we showed our little patch to its full advantage. 

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Not much to do round here as a tourist - we wandered round the town (half hour max) and otherwise sat by the fire, went for dinner at the pub, and paced the garden, briefly. Monday morning the hydro-trenching guy came back to make an electrical trench and an enormous amount of mud slurry ... super cool and absolutely showed the network of tree roots and unexpected pipes that exist round our house. Normal digging would never have got through it, so I'm glad we went with water shooting guy. My husband mapped all the unexpected pipes for the future, although we don't really know where most of them go.

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Tuesday morning we had our concrete pour which went well. No Dad, we didn't smooth the top of the concrete to make it too slippery, and we are already enjoying the luxury of having somewhere to stand while hanging the washing.

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The floor of the lavender shed also looks much better - we are going to concrete in a ramp so we can park the mower and chipper there. They took the back panel off to get the concrete chute in but didn't need it in the end. 

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My husband is also a historian who is annoyed by a lack of date documentation ... so he dated the concrete. Why not.

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Other than that there is endless painting of the studio. Windows, doors, walls, ceiling, inside and out, fascias, eves, beams. They have to come back and do the step, then stain the deck and the steps. It was horrible on the windy days but rather lovely on a day like today when it was sunny and still and frosty in the morning. 

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This is the colour I've gone with on the walls - the photo is after I've cut in the corners and the grooves between the boards with the white of the undercoat showing in the middle. I took this because when you've painted the whole wall it just looks like an off-white, but when it's next to an actual white you can see that it's a very soft grey-green. I am very pleased with it, and with my ability to pick a muted colour when every instinct wanted something much much stronger. The floor is another story though, and should be installed next week.

Sunday, July 12, 2026

A studio!

We finally had two days without any chance of rain and the guys came out from Queanbeyan to put my studio up. I thought it was pre-fab but it was actually planks of wood - cabin style I guess - and I watched it grow over a couple of days.

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The wood looks really lovely all natural but it's not robust enough to leave - especially on our western edge that cops the wind and the sun and the storms - so we are painting it inside and out. The roof is colorbond which is good and tough. We thought we'd do the painting ourselves to save some money but raw timber is a bit of a pain. And the inside was giving sauna vibes until we put the undercoat on. We are leaving the ceiling timber though - so just a couple of coats of clear varnish, which is much easier.

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Double glazed tilt / turn windows and doors are a double pain to paint; but we will do it! How hard can it be. We have a deadline of next Monday when the flooring goes in, and I think it should be fine. This is the undercoat going on.

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This is the view from the inside! So pretty, even on a 9 degree day when it's blowing a gale.

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And this is what colour the outside will be. I introduced myself to the lady over the road down the coast who had painted part of her house this colour and got the name of it, because I thought it looked fabulous. Interestingly, I would never have picked the paint sample in the store, but I love it now it's on, even after just one coat.  Much of that white is still undercoat, so will be yellow, and there'll be a dark grey steel skirt the same as the roof. Imagine, a little fairy house in your garden to peruse your arts and crafts! How amazingly wonderful.

Thursday, July 9, 2026

Gardening trivia

Here are some of the tiny gardening things that we have been up to. This is mostly for Dad, I don't think anyone else is very interested ... other than me! It will be the only way I remember what I've done, although my husband is keeping an any year diary of what we do each day. He's already making entries under old entries, which is very exciting ("this time last year we had already pruned the buddleia! What we were thinking!" etc). 

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First up is the first (and so far only) planting in our new garden cage, and it's in a pot, so probably cheating. A woman at quilters brought in some "planting garlic" so I snaffled a couple of heads and planted twenty fat garlic cloves in this pot. They should be ready in February, and require very little care until then, allegedly.

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Here I am sweeping the rocks. I don't plan to make a habit of sweeping the rocks, but I'm in the very very slow process of clearing this overgrown garden bed. We didn't know there were rocks in there, and they are actually quite lovely, and form natural tiers. So I'm sweeping them off this once, to see the shape, and then we will contemplate planting around them in the fullness of time. It was completely overgrown by rosemary, so I've cut that back to almost ground level and we will see what survives.

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This is something I'm calling "baby's first formwork" because this is, indeed, the first time I have ever prepared formwork for a concrete pad. We're getting the floor of the lavender shed reconcreted so we can store things in there, which requires a concerete truck, so we may as well get some other little things done too. This is under the clothesline, which was worn into bare dirt, and it took a fair amount of swearing, digging for tools in the shed and googling youtube videos. But you have to start somewhere and it is level (despite appearances). My husband provided guidance but he has been busy with his compost beds (on the left hand side, fabulous colorbond, nobody's burning those down).

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I also cleared off the front of the garden shed to put a path in there, but there are water pipes half way down and electricity conduit near the shed, so we have decided against concreting in case we need to get into it at some point. Of course we discovered this after we'd sledgehammered up the old concrete path and made a big dirt mess ... we are thinking of putting concrete pavers down. We have some from the old house and they're robust enough; it's just a bit more work. At least it was a good job to have tidied it up.

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I also used my weed tea on the new bed before putting mulch down. It smelled like the very breath of satan but I diluted it 1:10 as recommended on the internet and poured it over the bed, to improve the nitrogen. Does my bed need nitrogen? I don't know. I put the decomposed weeds on what remains of the compost, where apparently they will not spread weedy seeds, and I made more tea with new weeds. 

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And lastly we have a truly terrible bird photo - there is an owl in there. A very lovely, very well camouflaged owl, that watched us carefully but didn't fly away. That's its favourite spot and he's quite obvious once you see him ... but you can't. Not in this photo.

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Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Busy busy busy

We've had some sunny days and produced some electricity ... but not a tremendous amount. Our roof is quite shaded, especially at this time of year, so we're not sure if it is going to be the powerhouse we had hoped for. The only day we've put any into the battery at all was Sunday, when we left the house for seven hours to go into Queanbeyan to meet friends for lunch and go grocery shopping. Turns out the best way to use less power is to turn everything off and go somewhere else! Wow. 

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We have been unusually social though, these last couple of weeks. There was a concert at the museum - local musicians, which was excellent. They moved some of the exhibits out of the big room upstairs that has a stage at one end - apparently it was the first time it had been used for live music since the 1920s! There might have been dancing then. We did not have dancing, but there was a bar.

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Then there was the historical society annual dinner (no bar, bring your own bottle(s) of anything) where our table came third in the trivia and there was an excellent speech about the local home guard during the second world war. Sounds a bit dull but was really interesting - the guy was very entertaining. He is writing a book and kept saying things like "I've found this obscure record, does anyone know a William Maynard, born about 1920?" and someone up the back would go "Uncle Bill!!!!! He lost three fingers in 1952 and his wife was an alcoholic" etc. Small towns.

Then we went to an art exhibition opening for another art group in town - they seem to be a bit more serious than our group and have artist statements and coherent styles. It was great, and we knew a few people there, and there was a bar. Actually the same bar because the art people ran the bar at the concert too, to make a few extra dollars.

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Then I was not social at all and went down the coast for a couple of days, which is why all these pictures are beach pictures. Only an hour away but ten degrees warmer. I made a pair of pants that worked out and a shirt that really didn't.

Thursday, July 2, 2026

Solar panels and a battery

Another project knocked off - 28 solar panels up on the roof and a 27KW battery hooked up to them on the side of the house. In theory, for the amount of electricity we use, the battery should soak it up during the day and cover what we use at night ... although the theory has been falling down since we had them installed because it's been cloudy and rainy. 

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Our contribution was to admire the balance of the young people doing the installation (all over the roof, didn't even blink, utterly unafraid) and fork over vast sums of money. In theory it should pay for itself in eight or so years but we will see. It's nice to have protection for the blackouts that we get once or twice a year and our bore pump runs on electricity so it's good bushfire protection too. 

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We were a bit worried that it would spoil the look of our cute little house, but it's much less intrusive than we thought. A nice low profile on the roof and the black isn't that different from the tin. We have six facing east, six facing west and sixteen facing north - all shaded by the pines but between them they should give us enough juice if the sun is shining. 

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The battery has an app that shows how much electricity we use, how much the panels produce, how much the battery has and how much we are pulling from the grid or putting back into the grid ... it is one of the horribly mesmerising things like a weather station or flight radar that you get obsessed with even though it is objectively very dull. 

Sunday, June 28, 2026

More block printing

This is my new enthusiasm after the success of the test printing. I'm not sure exactly what you can use block printed fabric for - it has its own aesthetic - but bags are fine.

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This is the fishies! Quite a nice tote bag. I lined it but it's still a bit flimsy. Very useful though, I put my knitting in it last week when I went into Canberra to join a friend's knitting group. They sit in the coffee shop in the lobby of the Hyatt, have coffee and knit. It was absolutely lovely and I think I will go in as often as I can.

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Second project was a brush roll for my paintbrushes. I've been carrying them to art class in a paper bag and it's just not practical. So I made an enormous brush roll in yellow with flowers all over it. 

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I measured my brushes and everything but it's not exactly right. Some of them fall out if I hold it upside down. But it works better than the paper bag and it is very bright and cheerful. I  sandwiched it with cotton quilt batting to absorb any moisture.

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Third project was a monster tote. I like this pattern - variegated spirals - just the same thing over and over but I think it looks cool. I had planned to do another dot in there to give it some more dimension but it didn't look any good in the test print so I stuck with the spirals. 

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I underlined it with calico so it has a bit more body, which I think works better. It also has a fancy magnetic closure which I didn't put in the right way at all but it's useful.

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And fourth project was a silk scarf. It's the flowers again, but quite a different effect - almost translucent.

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It is very pretty but I'm not sure if it works as a scarf. The silk is quite solid and the paint makes it a bit stiff, even though I've washed and dried it. 

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I have had this silk sitting in a cupboard forever - it's from my work trip to India in 2018. When we visited the National Art Gallery in Delhi they gave us flowers and put lengths of white silk around everyone's necks during the welcome. All very lovely but travelling cabinet ministers don't want lengths of white silk so I quietly scooped them up. Like a good little underling. Hahahaha.

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